‘letters from yorkshire - holy trinity academy,...
TRANSCRIPT
‘Letters from Yorkshire’
Maura Dooley
Explore how Maura Dooley uses imagery to help shape our understanding of the relationshippresented to us in the poem.
What happens in the poem?
How is the speaker presented?
How is the relationship presented?
How does Dooley use language to shape meaning?
In addition to meeting our objective, we are also
going to focus on creating beautifully craftedacademic writing. You are going to craft short
responses to two quotations. I don’t expect a lot of writing from you today, but I do expect plenty of quality.
Poetic devices
Report and analysing verbs
Conjunctions to sequence and compare
Work through each of the tasksindependently.
We will feedbackin ten minutes.
1 For each image, find a short supporting quotation.
2 Write down two ideas or emotions that each image might symbolise.
3 List five words that describe the tone (mood) of the poem.
4Find one example of each poetic device and write down the effects achieved: personification, enjambment, rhetorical question.
In February, digging his garden, planting potatoes,
he saw the first lapwings return and came
indoors to write to me, his knuckles singing
as they reddened in the warmth
It’s not romance, simply how things are.
You out there, in the cold, seeing the seasons
turning, me with my heartful of headlines
feeding words onto a blank screen.
Is your life more real because you dig and sow?
You wouldn’t say so, breaking ice on a waterbutt,
clearing a path through snow. Still, it’s you
who sends me word of that other world
pouring air and light into an envelope. So that
at night, watching the same news in different houses,
our souls tap out messages across the icy miles.
Academic WritingFormal
Accurate
Precise
Logical
his knuckles singing
as they reddened in the warmth.
Personification Tone
Enjambment Suggests
Verb Highlights
me with my heartful of headlines
feeding words onto a blank screen.
Alliteration Tone
Metaphor Emphasises
Adjective Reveals
WHAT WENT WELL:
Look closely at language and content
EVEN BETTER IF:
1Is each point supported and fully developed? Remember that it’s important to write in-depth about carefully selected parts of the poem.
2Is the written expression appropriately precise and formal? Make sure that informal language (e.g. slang or language that is vague) has not been used.
3Is the writing technically accurate? Look carefully at the work and identify spelling, punctuation and grammatical errors; please also make the necessary corrections.
4Have a range of reporting and analysing verbs been used to help express and develop the points? Remember that each verb has a subtly different meaning.
5Are you impressed with the overall quality of the work? Thinkabout whether you’d be happy to submit this as your own response.
Is the writing technical accurate?
Is the writing precise?
Are the points relevant and credible?
Are the points expansive enough?
Are the quotations appropriate?
How does the work compare to yours?